Grand Opera House

The Meridian Grand Opera House was built by I. Marks and Levi Rothenberg next door
to their Marks Rothenberg Department Store in what was then a growing town on the
rail line between New Orleans and Chicago. As with many buildings from the period
called "Opera Houses", it was actually a venue for vaudeville, minstrel
shows and early silent film rather than for what we now call grand opera. The theatre
closed in 1927 under pressure from other more-modern theatres and legal wrangling
kept the facility unoccupied and untouched for almost almost seven decades.
The department store next door continued operation under various names through 1990.

In the 1980s, ideas began floating in the community for a way to reopen the
theatre and adapt the department store building. In 2000, the Riley Foundation
contributed $10 million to restore the buildings with a stipulation that Mississippi
State University own and operate the center. Along with funding by local, state, and
federal agencies, a $25 million restoration began in 2002. Ironically, the period
of dormancy was actually good for the facility in that much of the original
interior detailing had been preserved in a way that would not have been the case
if the theatre had remained active. The theatre reopened in September 2006 as part of the
Riley Center,
a performing arts, educational and conference center.

12/06/2005 13:16:24
Meridian Grand Opera House

12/06/2005 13:16:59
Meridian Grand Opera House

12/06/2005 13:18:24
Meridian Grand Opera House

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